$100,000 where a multiple-trade project of public works is involved 5/
$48,000 where a single trade project of public works is involved

Wyoming

$ 25,000

Footnotes:

1/ Eighteen States do not have prevailing wage laws. These
States are Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, and Virginia.

2/ Ohio. Ohio has distinct thresholds for work that involves roads, streets, alleys, sewers, ditches, and other works connected to road or bridge construction. The threshold for new construction that involves such work is $78,258. The threshold for remodeling that involves such work is $23,447.

Beginning January 1, 1996, and every even-numbered year thereafter, the Ohio director of commerce must adjust all the contract threshold amounts in accord with a formula set by the Ohio Revised Code, Chapter 4115.034.

3/Washington. A separate law applicable only to
State college/university construction provides for a $25,000 threshold amount.

4/West Virginia. A $50,000 threshold is applicable
for projects of the West Virginia Infrastructure and Jobs Development Council.

5/Wisconsin.
A multiple-trade project of public works is one in which no single trade accounts for 85 percent or more of the total labor cost of the project. Where a multiple-trade project of public works is involved, a threshold of $234,000 applies to public works projects erected, constructed, repaired, remodeled, or demolished by a private contractor for: (1) a city or village with a population of less than 2,500 or (2) a town.